Nick Farrell - Fudzilla.com - August 20, 2021
So that is most of the world stuffed
A post from the International Monetary Fund suggests that it would be a good idea to base your credit score on your browsing habits.
If the idea is followed, it could mean some serious changes in the way credit is obtained and mean you could be denied a mortgage based on what you were viewing.
Four researchers presented their findings from a working paper that examines the current relationship between finance and tech and sees the possibility of using the data from your browsing, search, and purchase history to create a more accurate mechanism for determining the credit rating of an individual or business.
The concept of using your web history to inform credit ratings is framed around the notion that lenders rely on hard-data that might obscure the worthiness of a borrower or paint an unnecessarily dire picture during hard times.
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A Look Inside China’s Social Credit System | NBC News Now (NBC News; videop; 6-4-19)
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I recall seeing a bumper sticker once that read "LEGALIZE FREEDOM." Unfortunately, it keeps going in the opposite direction, and those whom we may believe would be against it are often in full support of it. Shills in many of these various global institutions, foundations, and think tanks have been discussing issues like this since the mid-90s that I know of. After 911, some of the things they discussed were outrageous, and few of it actually came into being. Super-insider Zbigniew Brzezinski used to be a really good source for this type of "futurism" because it actually ended up happening, but he's gone now. Often the strategy is for them to ask for much more power than they actually want, while other times it's to test the waters to see what they may be able to get away with.
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